Scenes From An Ordinary 1950s Life- Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow- Billie’s, Billie The Pope Of “The Projects” Night, View
A YouTube film clip of The Shirelles performing the classic Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?.
By Bart Webber:
Will
You Still Love Me Tomorrow? Lyrics
Carole King
Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
Carole King
Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
Tonight you're mine
completely,
You give your love so
sweetly,
Tonight the light of
love is in your eyes,
But will you love me
tomorrow?
Is this a lasting
treasure,
Or just a moment's
pleasure,
Can I believe the
magic of your sighs,
Will you still love
me tomorrow?
Tonight with words
unspoken,
You said that I'm the
only one,
But will my heart be
broken,
When the night (When
the night)
Meets the morning
sun.
I'd like to know that
your love,
Is love I can be sure
of,
So tell me now and I
won't ask again,
Will you still love
me tomorrow?
Will you still love
me tomorrow?
Hey all, this is Bart
Webber from the old neighborhood, the old cranberry bogs neighborhood of Carver
down in Southeastern, Massachusetts, the world capital of that berry in the old
days , the Acre neighborhood to be exact when all the “boggers” lived from time
immemorial as they say. This is another one of those tongue-in-cheek commentaries
that I have been running around thinking about lately as retirement looms
directly ahead, retirement from the printing business that I started back in
the 1960s and which I am now getting ready to turn over to my youngest son (the
other two older boys are both computer whizzes and could give a tinker’s damn
about the soon to be dinosaur extinct old-time Guttenberg press print according
to them), the back story if you like, in the occasional sketches I have been
producing of late going back to the primordial youth time of the mid to late
1950s with its bags full of classic, now classic then just rock and roll, rock
songs for the ages.
Of course, any such
efforts on my part to see how the cultural jail-break took root down in the Acre have to include the views of
one Billie Bradley, William James Bradley, the schoolboy mad-hatter of the
1950s rock jailbreak out in our “the projects” Acre neighborhood. Yah, in those
days, unlike during his later fateful wrong turn trajectory days when after
searing failures to be the next best thing after Elvis (really after Bo Diddley
but in hard white enclave and consciously Northern-style racist bog country
that would turn out to be a non-starter, no, would turn out to be hazardous to
one’s health never mind one’s future) and the next dance-master general of the
new rock dispensation he turned to the life of petty and subsequently hard
crime, every kid, including his best friend, a guy named Peter Paul Markin,
whom we all called just Markin back then but who would later be called the
“Scribe” for obvious reasons, to hear what he had to say about any song that
came trumpeting over the radio, at least every one that we would recognize as
our own. Yeah those were the days when like a poet I read once in high school,
and English or is it British poet, said to be “young was very heaven.” (He, oh
yeah, now I remember, Wordsworth, the Lakes poet, who was referring to his view
of the French Revolution in the days before it got serious and blood was being
let on all sides)
Billie and Markin (an
on occasion me when they were having a dispute like whether Elvis’ sneer was
fake, stuff like that) personally spent many, many hours mainly up in his tiny
bedroom, his rock heaven bedroom, walls plastered with posters of Elvis, Bo
Diddley and Chuck Berry and of every new teen heartthrob singer, heartthrob to
the girls that is, around, every new record Billie could get his hands on, by
hook or by crook ( a euphemism for the five finger discount, you know the
“clip” that every guy, and some saucy girls, took at the rite of passage in the
Acre when they had their “wanting habits” on and no dough to pay for the stuff),
and neatly folded piles of clothing, also gathered by that same hook or by
crook (“clipping” clothes a whole separate art form in itself and rated higher
than merely grabbing some foolish cheapjack overpriced anyway rings to give
away to some girl who could have given a fuck about some such trinket),
appropriate to the king hell king of the schoolboy rock scene, the elementary
school rock scene between about 1956 to 1960. Much of that time was spent
discussing the “meaning” of various songs, especially their sexual
implications, ah, their mystery of girls-finding-out-about worthiness. (What we
didn’t know, even Billie, about the whole sex thing could fill volumes but we
like our older brothers, and sisters too, learned what little we did know, and
a lot of that was wrong we learned on the streets like everybody else. It
certainly wasn’t from prudish parents or heaven forbid the priests at Sacred
Heart, the main church servicing the Acre.)
Although in early
1959 Markin’s family was beginning to start the process of moving out of the
projects to a run-down shack of a house in Muddy Bottom even lower on the
neighborhood scale that the Acre if you could believe that the only virtue, a
small one being that they would “own,” along with the bank, their own house. More
importantly, Markin had begun to move away from Billie’s orbit, his new found
orbit as king hell gangster wannabe, after figuring out that the life of petty
crime was much harder to deal with that reading books to find out two million
facts which he had settled into one summer after a few run-ins with the law
over a couple of “clips,” he would still wander back to the old neighborhood
until mid-1960 just to hear Billie’s take on whatever music was interesting him
at the time.
These commentaries,
these Billie commentaries, are Markin’s recollections of his and Billie’s conversations
on the song lyrics in this series. But Markin was not relying on memory alone.
During this period he would use his father’s tape recorder, by today’s standard
his big old reel to reel monstrosity of a tape recorder, to record Billie’s
covers of the then current hit songs (for those who have not read previously of
Billie’s “heroics” he was a pretty good budding rock singer at the time) and their
conversations of those song meanings that we fretted about for hours.
About twenty years
ago long after Markin had gone face down in his own hail of bullets down in
Mexico after a dope deal he was either trying to broker with some mal hombres
from some budding cartel or, more likely, giving the residual “wanting habits”
that haunted us all for many years whether we liked books or not stealing the
“product” I was helping his late mother clear out the attic of that shack of a
house over on Muddy Bottom in order to sell it
after Mr. Markin had passed away I found those tapes among the
possessions Markin had left behind. Mrs. Markin having no earthly use for them
passed them on to me as tanks for my help in cleaning the place up. I,
painstakingly, have had those reels transcribed so that many of these
commentaries will be the actual words (somewhat edited, of course) that appear
in these sketches. That said, Billie, king hell rock and roll king of the old
neighborhood, knew how to call a lyric, and make us laugh to boot. Wherever you
are Billie, in jail or in jail-break I’m still pulling for you. Got it.
Here’s what Billie
had to say about the lyrics to the classic girl sex dilemma song Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow that we
all went wild over but which baffled a bunch of twelve and thirteen year old
boys who were trying to figure out what that girl was worried about. Yeah,
that’s the way it was:
Billie back again,
William James Bradley, if you didn’t know. Markin’s pal, Peter Paul Markin’s
pal, from over the Myles Standish Elementary School and the pope of rock lyrics
down here in “the projects, ” the Acre projects where I was born, my father was
born and my grandfather came to when he was a young man. The Carver projects, the
place where all the boggers live, the people who keep cranberries on the
Thanksgiving plates every year if you don’t know. Markin, who I hadn’t seen for
a while since he moved “uptown” to the Muddy Bottom a place even lower on the
human living scene that the Acre according to my parents, came by the other day.
Even we guys from the Acre wouldn’t be caught dead in Muddy Bottom, wouldn’t
let a guy from there into our circle at school, well, except Markin because he
had to go there or live on the streets, something he was willing to do for a
while rather moving from the Acre. So he came by the other day to breathe in
the fresh air of the old neighborhood and we got to talking about this latest
record, Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow? by the Shirelles. They are hot.
Fair’s fair right, so
I’ll give you Markin’s, Peter Paul’s, take on the lyrics, so I can come
crashing down on his silly pipe dream ideas. By the way if you don’t know, and
he will tell you this himself if he is honest, he was behind, way behind, in
figuring out girls, and their girlish charms. I had to practically tell him
everything he knows.
I’ll let you know how
I found out, found out true later. Where did I learn it? Hell like everybody
else from the older kids, the older guys, and my older sisters too if you can
believe that. So I know a lot, or at least enough to keep old Peter Paul from
being a total goofball. Still, see, he thinks the main thing is that the girl
in the song here is worried about her reputation because she has just given in,
in a moment of passion, to her boyfriend, it’s way too late to turn back and
yet she is having second thoughts, second thought regrets, about it, and about
what he will think of her and whether it will get around that she “does it.”
Yah, she “does it,” I
will give Markin that much, now officially certified a woman, or at least
acting like a woman can act, that is what my sister Donna says, and from the
feel of the song, probably in some back seat of some “boss” convertible, a
Chevy I hope. Her guy, some under-the-hood day and night guy making that baby,
his real baby, hum against the in-stock store-bought standards of his father’s
car, his old fogy father’s car. She was breathless weeks ago when her Chevy guy
came up gunning that beast behind her walking home from school and said “Hop
in.” And she did without a minute’s hesitation, had been saying rosaries and
novenas that Mister Chevy would stop her in her tracks before she went over to
his place and made a fool of herself, now she's the queen bee of the high
school Adventure Car-Hop night. Sitting in that front seat just the right
distance away to show everybody, every walking girl in town what she had, and
how easy it was that she had it. All the other girls, friend or foe, frantic at
her fortune and ready to leap, girls’ “lav” leap, all over her come Monday
morning finely-tuned grapevine gossip time. So the “tonight” of the song was
paying back time, car- hop queen bee paying back time, time to make Mr. Chevy
glad he stopped behind her that day a week before. No turning back.
I hope, I really
hope, they “did the deed” down by the seashore, over by whatever local version
of secluded “no married adults need enter” Plymouth Cove, big old moon out, big
old laughing moon, waves splashing against the rocks and against the sounds of
the night, the sounds of the be-bop moaning and groaning night. Call me a
romantic but at least I hope that is where she gave “it” up. Or, maybe, away
from coastal shoreline possibilities if you lived with Dorothy in Kansas it was
at some secluded lovers’ lane mountain top, tree-lined, dirt road, away from
the city noise, some be-bop music playing on the car radio, just to keep those
mountain fears away, motor humming against the autumn chill and the creaking
sun ready to devour that last mountain top and face the day, and to face the
music.
But see that’s where
Markin has got it all wrong, all wrong on two counts, because even if Chevy
guy’s two-timing her, or spreading the “news” about his conquest, or even that
hellish girls’ lav whirlwind inferno is not really what’s bothering her. Markin
has got this starry-eyed thing, and I think it is from hanging around, or being
around, all those straight lace no-go Catholic girls we go to school and church
with, who do actually worry about their reputations, at least for public
consumption. That is why high Catholic that I am, just like old Markin, I don’t
go within twenty yards of those, well, teasers. Yah, teasers but that’s a story
for another time, because right now we have only time for women, or girls who
act like women.
What’s bothering
moonstruck song girl, number one, is that she likes it, she liked doing it with
the Chevy guy, and is worried that she’ll go crazy every time a boy gets within
an arm’s length of her. She “heard” that once a girl starts “doing it” they can’t
help themselves and are marks, easy marks, for every guy who gives them the
eye. Jesus, where did she ever get that idea. Must have been out in the
streets, although I personally never heard such an idea when I was asking
around. This is what I heard, well, not from the street but from my sister
Donna, she said it was okay, natural even, for girls to like sex. If the moment
was right, and maybe the guy too. It wasn’t some Propagation of the Faith,
do-your-sex-duty to multiply thing we heard in church. Hell, Donna said she
liked it too, and believe me, old Donna doesn’t like much if you listen to her
long enough. So moonstruck girl don’t worry.
But number two you do
have to worry about, although I don’t know what you can do about it now. I
never did ask Donna about that part. About getting pregnant. Yah, the dreaded
word for girls and guys alike when you were just trying to have a little fun,
just liking it. Now everything your mother told you about “bad” girls, about
leaving school, about shot-gun weddings, or about having to go to “Aunt
Bessie’s” for a few months, flood her memories and as the sun comes up there is
momentary panic. Like I say I don’t know what you can do. I don’t know the
medical part of the thing. But Peter Paul, leave it to Peter Paul, who knows
diddley about sex (except what I tell him) says do you know about “rubbers.”
And he got all in a lather telling me that there is some new pill coming out,
and coming out soon, so you don’t have to worry. [The blessed Pill, hail
science-Bart.] This “rubbers” stuff from
a guy was practically missed the first time he kissed a girl. That take a pill and
everything is alright is just because the goof reads Newsweek and Time and not
because he actually knows what makes a girl tick and why. But if he is right,
and I ain’t saying he is, then check it out and then you can still like “doing
it.” And not worry.
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